Label: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (US), UDSACD 2137
Style: Folk Rock, Country Rock
Country: Palo Alto, California, U.S.
Time: 36:04
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 205 Mb
Looking
at the sepia tone album cover of the Workingman’s Dead 50th Anniversary
Deluxe Edition, I give away my age when I say I remember my older
brother having the original on 8-Track tape back when it came out in
1970. I remember my seven-year-old brain being somewhat mortified of it
because the men pictured on the cover looked like zombies to me ( which I
attribute to the old-timey feel of the photo and the post – Night of
the Living Dead mania of the day).
My fear didn’t last long, however.
It subsided one day when my brother was not at home and I put the tape
in his trusty Pioneer player and listened to the eight songs on the
album.
I remember thinking during that clandestine listening session
that the band sounded a lot like some of the other bands that my older
sibling listened to like CCR or CSNY. What set them apart, however, was
that unlike a lot of the other bands of the day, they sounded like they
were actually having fun playing their instruments and singing. That
impression has never left me.
Fifty years later as I listen to the
same songs and pick up on some of the weighty themes of the record – the
working life, the nature of existence, maintaining hope amidst despair,
and staring down death, I still hear an exuberant undercurrent of love
and compassion coming from the Grateful Dead’s music that continually
sets them apart for me in the world of rock and roll bands.
I still
hear their love for music for music’s sake, but now I also additionally
hear an affection for their musical forefathers and influences, for life
itself, and for their fans. It is a love that literally pours out of
the speakers when their songs are playing and is a love that helps
explain the existence of an unprecedented and unmatched fanatical
fanbase decades later.
The eight songs on Workingman’s Dead features
the band displaying their amazing ability to synthesize elements from
Bluegrass, Folk, Country, Blues, Jazz, Dylan’s early electric songs, and
sixties rock and roll to masterfully forge a distinctly original sound
of their own.
That all of these songs still sound fresh and lively
now after a half-century has passed is a testament to the prodigious
individual and collective talents of the band.
(americanahighways.org/2020/07/14/review-the-grateful-deads-workingmans-dead-is-still-quintessential-listening-50-years-later/)
01. Uncle John's Band (04:47)
02. High Time (05:15)
03. Dire Wolf (03:16)
04. New Speedway Boogie (04:09)
05. Cumberland Blues (03:18)
06. Black Peter (05:46)
07. Easy Wind (05:00)
08. Casey Jones (04:29)

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